View allAll Photos Tagged PHOSPHORESCENT

"Song for Zula" - by Phosphorescent

 

Some say love is a burning thing

That it makes a fiery ring

Oh but I know love as a fading thing

Just as fickle as a feather in a stream

See, honey, I saw love. You see, it came to me

It put its face up to my face so I could see

Yeah then I saw love disfigure me

Into something I am not recognizing

 

See, the cage, it called. I said, "Come on in"

I will not open myself up this way again

Nor lay my face to the soil, nor my teeth to the sand

I will not lay like this for days now upon end

You will not see me fall, nor see me struggle to stand

To be acknowledge by some touch from his gnarled hands

You see, the cage, it called. I said, "Come on in"

I will not open myself up this way again

 

You see, the moon is bright in that treetop night

I see the shadows that we cast in the cold, clean light

My feet are gold. My heart is white

And we race out on the desert plains all night

See, honey, I am not some broken thing

I do not lay here in the dark waiting for thee

No my heart is gold. My feet are light

And I am racing out on the desert plains all night

 

So some say love is a burning thing

That it makes a fiery ring

Oh but I know love as a caging thing

Just a killer come to call from some awful dream

O and all you folks, you come to see

You just stand there in the glass looking at me

But my heart is wild. And my bones are steam

And I could kill you with my bare hands if I was free

 

www.youtube.com/watch?v=FcdOLKx2XG8&feature=youtu.be

  

The Impossible Project

Polaroid Instant Lab Universal

 

Plastic wrap with Green Phosphorescent paint, black light and a blue flashlight.

 

ditch your phosphorescent

 

FOV: 5" wide.

 

Leftovers melted together.

 

Shown under UVc light.

 

Key:

WL = White light (halogen + LED)

FL = Fluoresces

PHOS = Phosphorescent

BL = 450nm,

UVa = 368nm (LW), UVb = 311nm (MW), UVc = 254nm (SW)

'>' = "stimulated by:", '!' = "bright", '~' = "dim"

 

"Gremlin"

18Sep2015

 

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18 Watt Triple Output UV lamp from Polman Minerals - Way Too Cool UV lamps

 

FOV: 5" wide.

 

Frozen melted salt containing home made phosphors baloneystonite in copperlite.

 

Shown under UVabc light.

 

Key:

WL = White light (halogen + LED)

FL = Fluoresces

PHOS = Phosphorescent

BL = 450nm,

UVa = 368nm (LW), UVb = 311nm (MW), UVc = 254nm (SW)

'>' = "stimulated by:", '!' = "bright", '~' = "dim"

 

"Old Paint"

8Oct2015

 

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18 Watt Triple Output UV lamp from Polman Minerals - Way Too Cool UV lamps

Late model Time-O-Lite enlarger timer, nearly identical to the timers I used in my high school darkroom. Each enlarger station had an Omega B-22 condenser enlarger whose power was controlled by a Time-O-Lite, as well as a set of Kodak Polycontrast filters, an enlarger easel and a grain focuser.

 

The irony of making this photo with digital equipment is not lost on me.

 

I used a powerful flashlight to "charge" the phosphorescent dial immediately before making the exposure, and a couple of small, "warm" (2700K) LED lights behind the camera to cast a glow on the nameplate and switches that is reminiscent of darkroom safe lights. The background is just an unlit room in my house at night.

From the basement lab comes this 2.5" wide specimen.

 

On an aluminum tray, salt {~15 mL}, washing soda and sulfur were heated until the salt had melted leaving a mustard yellow mass that smelled strongly of hydrogen sulfide.

 

On the sample was then placed a solution of calcium chloride containing a drop of MnCl2 sol and a drop of PbCl2 ssol. which was absorbed into the yellow mass turning it whitish. The sample was then reheated until the salt had melted.

 

Suspected phosphor: CaS:Mn,Pb

 

Contains:

NaCl:Cu (FL+PHOS Lavendar,Pink,Orange >UVa,b,c)

 

Shown in phosphorescent state after exposure to UVabc light.

 

Key:

WL = White light (halogen + LED)

FL = Fluoresces

PHOS = Phosphorescent

BL = 450nm,

UVa = 368nm (LW), UVb = 311nm (MW), UVc = 254nm (SW)

'>' = "stimulated by:", '!' = "bright", '~' = "dim"

 

Jackolite in stages

23Sep2015

 

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18 Watt Triple Output UV lamp from Polman Minerals - Way Too Cool UV lamps

0 RETOUCHES & LUMIERE NATURELLE

 

Soft utilisés : GIMP ( ajout logo )

 

matériel : Nikon d7000

AF-S DX NIKKOR 35mm f/1.8G

 

modele : cube easy 0 phosphorescent ( edition limité )

 

site officiel du cube : www.insidezecube.com/

 

les allummers prod

 

idee : el joker

 

====================================

0 RETOUCH & NATURAL LIGHT

 

Soft : GIMP ( add logo )

 

material : Nikon d7000

AF-S DX NIKKOR 35mm f/1.8G

 

modele : cube easy 0 phosphorescent ( limited edition )

 

official site of the cube : www.insidezecube.com/

 

idea : el joker

 

les allummers prod

Magical green colors the black lava rock.

The Laugavegur is a famous trekking route in South-West Iceland from the hot springs area of Landmannalaugar to the glacial valley of Þórsmörk. It is noted for the wide variety of landscapes that are experienced in just 55 km.

The only light source were the phosphorescent hands of my watch. Amazing how bright this light is in the dark.

Btw, the big hand is half as thin as the small hand, but seems thicker because of the shutter speed of 30 seconds.

 

ODC - Theme (22-05-2013): Bright

Akin to landing lights for aircraft, ESA is developing infrared and phosphorescent markers for satellites, to help future space servicing vehicles rendezvous and dock with their targets.

 

Developed by Hungarian company Admatis as part of an ESA Clean Space project, these markers would offer robotic space servicing vehicles a steady target to home in on, providing critical information on the line of sight, distance and pointing direction of their target satellite.

 

Initial testing of these ‘Passive Emitting Material at end-of-life’ or PEMSUN markers took place at the end of March 2019 inside ESA’s GNC Rendezvous, Approach and Landing Simulator, part of the Agency's Orbital Robotics and Guidance, Navigation and Control Laboratory, at its ESTEC technical centre in Noordwijk, the Netherlands.

 

“The idea itself is not new, but this is the first time we’ve manufactured and tested sample patches, cut into spacecraft multi-layer insulation covering,” comments ESA Clean Space trainee Sébastien Perrault. “For the design we’ve looked into one larger pattern incorporating smaller versions for when the space servicing vehicle comes close enough that its camera’s field of view is filled.

 

“These markers would be very useful during eclipse states for instance, when Earth obscures the Sun in low Earth orbit, to allow the chaser vehicle to stay fixed on its target, potentially in combination with radio tags.”

 

ESA is studying space servicing vehicles to carry out a wide range of roles in orbit, from refurbishment and refuelling to mission disposal at their end of life.

 

Credits: ESA–P. Sebirot

Panorama shot - NC fall colors - phosphorescent oranges at left are crape myrtles and a fruit producing pear tree.

Make-Up: Patrizia Ricciardi

Some years ago, while watching dolphins glowing in phosphorescent plankton off Baja, one of the crew told me a story about when he was in the US Navy during a conflict. A sailor on night watch duty sounded the alarm because he thought a torpedo was heading for their ship. But as you will have guessed, it was a dolphin skimming through the phosphorescent plankton. His nickname after that was "Fish", but there is some resemblance to torpedoes. This is a Pacific White-sided Dolphin (Lagenorhynchus obliquidens), which is found in the cool waters of the North Pacific. Its generic name Lagenorhynchus means flask-shaped nose and obliquidens means slanting teeth. It was first named by fish taxonomist Theodore Nicholas Gill in 1865 on the basis of three skulls found near San Francisco ten years earlier. I photographed this one in the Johnstone Strait near Port MacNeill on the north-east coast of Vancouver Island.

The landscape is colored red by the lights at the VIS. The little green dots are phosphorescent markers on the edge of the parking lot.

Juvenile Yellow-crowned Night Heron. I am guessing an algae bloom from all the stuff in the water as a result of the Memorial Day floods created the unusual phosphorescent color on the sand bar once the tides returned to normal on Horsepen Bayou.

This little miss is in a turquoise blue phosphorescent resin (aqua). Very little light enough to make it shine in the dark! With her magic cauldron, she will cook lots of potions for Halloween, but don't be fooled by her angelic apparence, little bat wings betray temperament of a little demon!

Her makeup, blush, outfit, wig and cauldron have been made by Nekochaton.

 

Takadox lurking in his cave, immersed in the everlasting darkness of the pit. Ever wondered how that would look like?

 

- very slightly edited

When a recent mission took Stormtrooper Bruce to a new planet, he returned with a local delicacy which he hoped the guys would be willing to try.

 

STB: You should go easy on those deviled eggs. That merchant at the market warned me eating too many at one sitting might result in unusual side effects.

 

TK-432: What? You're telling us now? This is our third plate.

 

STB: Well, I didn't know they would be this tasty. I'd never heard of that kind of bird before. And I had to tweak the recipe a little to make them more like the deviled eggs we're used to.

 

TK-1110: What? You're telling us now? What kind of bird is it?

 

STB: To be honest I'm not 100% sure it is a bird since there were no records of it in the Avian Database.

 

TK-432: Vader's dogs... you mean these could be reptile eggs? But they taste so good!

 

TK-1110: Let's get back to those side effects for a mo. What ... oh. I think I see already. Neon purple phosphorescent gas?

 

TK-432: Cool! Let's see if it glows in the dark.

 

STB: Let's not. Just step away from the eggs and I'll get us some more burgers.

 

TK-432: Wait. If they're not bird eggs or reptile eggs, what are they? What else lays eggs? Never mind - I don't even want to know. They taste so.. Ooops, excuse me - again.

 

Boba Fett: Dude, you think you could fix me a plate of these fancy eggs for tomorrow? The P is stopping by to let me know who he's placed a bounty on this month, and he really, really loves his snacks.

 

STB: That is just SO wrong I don't even want to think about it. Say pretty please and I'll make it two plates.

 

_____________________________________________

Viewing Large is always fun - just click on the image.

This is a lino block print of Marie Skłodowska-Curie (7 November 1867 – 4 July 1934) shows the famous Polish-born, naturalized-French physicist and chemist at work in her lab. The contents of her lab glassware appropriately glow-in-the-dark!

 

Marie Curie was the first woman to wind a Nobel prize, the only woman to ever win TWO Nobel prizes, and the only person ever to win in two different science: physics and chemistry! She was also the first female professor at the University of Paris, and in 1995 became the first woman to be entombed on her own merits in the Panthéon in Paris. Born Maria Salomea Skłodowska in Warsaw, she studied secretly at the Floating University there before moving to Paris where she earned higher scientific degrees, met her PhD supervisor and future husband Pierre.

 

She was one of the pioneers who helped explain radioactivity, a term she coined. She was the one who first developped a means of isolating radioacitve isotopes and discovered not one, but two new elements: polonium (named for her native country) and radium. She also pioneered radioactive medicine, proposing the treatment of tumors with radioactivity. She founded medical research centres, the Curie Institutes in Paris and Warsaw which are still active today. She created the first field radiology centres during World War I. She died in 1934 from aplastic anemia brought on by exposure to radiation, including arrying test tubes of radium in her pockets during research and her World War I service in her mobile X-ray units.

 

Her pioneering work explaining radioactivity earned her the 1903 Nobel Prize in Physics with her husband Pierre Curie and with physicist Henri Becquerel. At first, the Committee intended to honour only Pierre and Becquerel, but Swedish mathematician Magnus Goesta Mittag-Leffler, an advocate of women in science alerted Pierre to the situation. After Pierre's complaint, Marie's name was added to the nomination. The 1911 Nobel Prize in Chemistry was awarded to her "in recognition of her services to the advancement of chemistry by the discovery of the elements radium and polonium, by the isolation of radium and the study of the nature and compounds of this remarkable element."

 

Her life and legacy are truly extraordinary!

 

Both of the elements she discovered are radioactive, meaning that they spontaneously give off radiation. All of the isotopes of polonium emit alpha particles, but Polonium-210 will emit a blue glow which is caused by excitation of surrounding air. Radium emits alpha, beta and gamma particles - that is 2 protons and 2 neutrons, electrons as well as x-rays. Thus, I've shown her sample surrounded by the symbols of these particles: the straight and wiggly lined arrows, and made the sample with glow-in-the-dark ink. While the materials she discovered and worked with would have glowed due to radioactivity, never fear... these prints glow due to phosphorescence - a different process which is not dangerous. The ink will absorb UV light (for instance, from sunlight) and re-emit it in the dark.

 

The linocut is printed on Japanese kozo paper 9.25" by 12.5" (23.5 cm by 32 cm) in an edition of eight.

FOV: 6" wide.

 

From L to R:

Mexican T-type Calcite, Polish Celestine, Afghani Hackmanite on Winchite.

 

Contains:

Calcite (FL+PHOS Pink,Yellow,Blue >UVa,b,c)

Celestine (FL+PHOS Pale Yellow,Pale Blue >UVa,bc)

Hackmanite (FL+PHOS Orange >UVab)

Winchite (FL Blue green, Reddish blue, Greenish blue >UVa,b,c)

 

Shown under UVa light.

 

Key:

WL = White light

FL = Fluoresces

PHOS = Phosporescent

UVa = 368nm (LW), UVb = 311nm (MW), UVc = 254nm (SW)

'>' = "stimulated by:"

 

Obtained from Highland Rocks and Gems' Rockyard, Burns OR, USA.

Obtained from Minershop

 

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18 Watt Triple Output UV lamp from Polman Minerals - Way Too Cool UV lamps

Canon 5D mark III

F/5.6

0.8 sec

ISO 1000

 

Plastic wrap with Green Phosphorescent paint, a black light and a blue flashlight.

 

Phosfluorescent lamp made from spare test tubes, hardwood dowels, copper pipe, screen molding and veneer. Electronics: 18 AWG speaker wire, LM317T voltage regulator and a 51 ohm resistor. Driven by 4x 380nm LEDs at 25mA. This lamp also has a power switch on the back.

 

Shown in the dark with LEDs on.

Make-Up: Patrizia Ricciardi

Phosfluorescent art on aluminum.

Je ne pense pas "arnaque" même si je vous laisse juge en vision parallèle, de voir un éventuel effet 3 D! ( Que L & Levy ne pouvait ignorer ! )

Mais plutôt d'une protection de la part de Loïe Fuller qui "déposa un total de dix brevets et copyright, principalement reliés à ses accessoires (sels phosphorescents qu'elle élabore elle-même et applique sur ses costumes) et dispositifs d’éclairage "

De nombreuses video d'époque colorisées à la main son visible sur le net.

www.youtube.com/watch?v=LIOjV5e1aQQ

 

"Loïe Fuller, nom de scène de Mary Louise Fuller, née à Hinsdale le 22 janvier 1862 et morte à Paris le 1er janvier 1928, est une danseuse américaine et l'une des pionnières de la danse moderne ; elle est célèbre pour les voiles qu'elle faisait tournoyer dans ses chorégraphies de danse serpentine et pour ses talents de metteuse en scène.

L’avènement de l’éclairage électrique et l'imagination créatrice de Fuller suscitent une révolution dans les arts de la scène.

Tournoyant sur un carré de verre éclairé par-dessous, sculptée par les faisceaux de dizaines de projecteurs latéraux, noyée dans des flots (parfois des centaines de mètres) de tissu léger, Fuller, métamorphosée par la couleur, emplit l’espace scénique de ses formes lumineuses en mouvement. Dans certaines de ses pièces, des miroirs stratégiquement placés et des jeux d’éclairages savamment étudiés démultiplient son image à l'infini."

WK

Un exemple colorisé de cet excellent site:

www.backto3d.com/page7.php?view=preview&category=4&am...

 

I do not think "scam" even if I leave you judge in parallel vision, to see a possible effect 3 D! ( That L & Levy could not ignore! ) But rather a protection on the part of Loïe Fuller who "deposited a total of ten patents and copyright, mainly related to its accessories (phosphorescent salts that it develops itself and applies on its costumes) and lighting devices"

Many vintage video hand-colorized visible sound on web.

www.youtube.com/watch?v=LIOjV5e1aQQ

 

"Loïe Fuller, stage name of Mary Louise Fuller, born in Hinsdale on January 22, 1862 and died in Paris on January 1, 1928, is an American dancer and one of the pioneers of modern dance; She is famous for the sails she used to spin in her serpentine dance choreographies and for her directing skills.

The advent of electric lighting and Fuller’s creative imagination sparked a revolution in the performing arts.

Swirling on a square of lighted glass below, sculpted by the beams of dozens of side projectors, drowned in waves (sometimes hundreds of meters) of light fabric, Fuller, transformed by color, fills the stage space with its luminous shapes in motion. In some of his pieces, strategically placed mirrors and skillfully studied lighting plays multiply his image to infinity."

s:WK

   

FOV: 5" wide.

 

Frozen melted salt containing home made phosphors; Jackolite2 and Jackobluelite2 on Sunngreenlite.

 

Shown under UVc light.

 

Key:

WL = White light (halogen + LED)

FL = Fluoresces

PHOS = Phosphorescent

BL = 450nm,

UVa = 368nm (LW), UVb = 311nm (MW), UVc = 254nm (SW)

'>' = "stimulated by:", '!' = "bright", '~' = "dim"

 

"Stegallopolus"

2Oct2015

 

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18 Watt Triple Output UV lamp from Polman Minerals - Way Too Cool UV lamps

 

FOV: 6" wide.

 

Frozen melted salt containing home made phosphors based on Group II sulfides. Features Baloneystonite II on right.

 

Shown under UVb light.

 

Key:

WL = White light (halogen + LED)

FL = Fluoresces

PHOS = Phosphorescent

BL = 450nm,

UVa = 368nm (LW), UVb = 311nm (MW), UVc = 254nm (SW)

'>' = "stimulated by:", '!' = "bright", '~' = "dim"

 

Group II sulfides

6Oct2015

 

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18 Watt Triple Output UV lamp from Polman Minerals - Way Too Cool UV lamps

From Greenland comes this 2.55" wide specimen.

 

Contains:

Tugtupite (FL+PHOS Orange,Pink, Rose-pink >UVa,b,c)

Chkalovite (FL Blue green >UVc)

 

Shown in phosphorescent state after exposure to UVabc light.

 

Key:

WL = White light

FL = Fluoresces

PHOS = Phosporescent

UVa = 368nm (LW), UVb = 311nm (MW), UVc = 254nm (SW)

'>' = "stimulated by:"

 

Obtained from Minershop

 

MSG1564

 

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18 Watt Triple Output UV lamp from Polman Minerals - Way Too Cool UV lamps

Make-Up: Patrizia Ricciardi

 

FOV: 5" wide.

 

Frozen melted salt containing home made phosphors; Baloneystonite with Jackobluelite2 on base of NaCl + Al2(SO4)3.

 

Shown under UVc light.

 

Key:

WL = White light (halogen + LED)

FL = Fluoresces

PHOS = Phosphorescent

BL = 450nm,

UVa = 368nm (LW), UVb = 311nm (MW), UVc = 254nm (SW)

'>' = "stimulated by:", '!' = "bright", '~' = "dim"

 

"Baloneystone Mountain"

28Sep2015

 

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18 Watt Triple Output UV lamp from Polman Minerals - Way Too Cool UV lamps

FOV: 5" wide.

 

Frozen melted salt containing home made phosphors; Jacklolite2 melted into SunnygreenMnlite. Melted on stainless steel spoon.

 

Shown under blue LED light and photographed through magenta laser protection goggles.

 

Key:

WL = White light (halogen + LED)

FL = Fluoresces

PHOS = Phosphorescent

BL = 450nm,

UVa = 368nm (LW), UVb = 311nm (MW), UVc = 254nm (SW)

'>' = "stimulated by:", '!' = "bright", '~' = "dim"

 

"In Flight"

27Sep2015

 

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18 Watt Triple Output UV lamp from Polman Minerals - Way Too Cool UV lamps

 

FOV: 4" wide.

 

CaAl655 phosphor melted into salt. Remelted on spoon showing separation of yellow and red phosphors.

 

Shown under UVabc light.

 

Key:

WL = White light (halogen + LED)

FL = Fluoresces

PHOS = Phosphorescent

Blue = 450nm,

UVa = 368nm (LW), UVb = 311nm (MW), UVc = 254nm (SW)

'>' = "stimulated by:", '!' = "bright", '~' = "dim"

 

CaAl655 in Salt

4Oct2015

 

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18 Watt Triple Output UV lamp from Polman Minerals - Way Too Cool UV lamps

Les taches bleues sont celles des lumières émises par du plancton phosphorescent...

 

FOV: 6" wide.

 

Frozen melted salt containing home made phosphors: sunnylite, jackolite and sphalerhalite.

 

Shown under UVa light.

 

Key:

WL = White light (halogen + LED)

FL = Fluoresces

PHOS = Phosphorescent

BL = 450nm,

UVa = 368nm (LW), UVb = 311nm (MW), UVc = 254nm (SW)

'>' = "stimulated by:", '!' = "bright", '~' = "dim"

 

"Harlequin"

13Oct2015

 

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18 Watt Triple Output UV lamp from Polman Minerals - Way Too Cool UV lamps

A estas alturas ya no es un secreto para nadie que haya visitado mi galería que soy un incondicional enamorado de las Islas Canarias.

En mi último viaje a Tenerife, en Septiembre de 2011, subí a las Cañadas del Teide cuatro veces, dos por la tarde para buscar localizaciones para hacer una sesión de nocturna, y dos de noche para realizar esa sesión y probar mi primera circumpolar alrededor del pico del Teide.

La primera tarde, después de comer en Santa Cruz de Tenerife y hacer algunas compras por la capital, llegamos a las Cañadas con el tiempo justo de recorrerlas de Norte a Sur, hacer un buen montón de fotos y tener la oprtunidad de, ya con un cierto "fresquito" ambiente, fotografiar una hermosísima puesta de sol en el Llano de Ucanca.

Pocos minutos antes, cuando el sol bajaba en el horizonte, y pensando que los tajinastes no son unas flores muy fotogénicas en pleno verano, mi querida tierra canaria, sonriendo para sus adentros, quiso hacerme un guiño y, al volverme después de hacer una foto a las montañas de lava en el horizonte, me ofreció el descubrimiento de este grupo de tajinastes que, iluminados por el sol poniente, me ofrecían sus increíbles fosforescencias como diciéndome... "Que no somos hermosos en verano, eh?... Fotografía, muchacho, y verás lo que de aquí te llevas.

Me llevé esta hermosura de imagen casi-abstracta.

 

Música recomendada: "Ain't No Sunshine". Bill Withers.

these are so hard to capture...but this is my best effort so far

1250 ISO; f1.8, 0.6sec;manual focus

 

FOV: 5.5" wide.

 

Frozen melted salt containing home made phosphors based on Group II sulfides.

 

Shown in phosphorescent state after exposure to UVabc light.

 

Key:

WL = White light (halogen + LED)

FL = Fluoresces

PHOS = Phosphorescent

BL = 450nm,

UVa = 368nm (LW), UVb = 311nm (MW), UVc = 254nm (SW)

'>' = "stimulated by:", '!' = "bright", '~' = "dim"

 

"Morpheus"

20Sep2015

 

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18 Watt Triple Output UV lamp from Polman Minerals - Way Too Cool UV lamps

 

FOV: 5.5" wide.

 

Frozen melted salt containing home made phosphors based on Group II sulfides.

 

Shown under UVb light.

 

Key:

WL = White light (halogen + LED)

FL = Fluoresces

PHOS = Phosphorescent

BL = 450nm,

UVa = 368nm (LW), UVb = 311nm (MW), UVc = 254nm (SW)

'>' = "stimulated by:", '!' = "bright", '~' = "dim"

 

"Morpheus"

20Sep2015

 

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18 Watt Triple Output UV lamp from Polman Minerals - Way Too Cool UV lamps

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